Materials & Design (May 2025)

Highly toughening of PLLA-Based micropart via stretching induced stereocomplex crystal microstructure evolution

  • Yeping Xie,
  • Jiayu Tan,
  • Shijian Fang,
  • Zhuo Zheng,
  • Lei Yao,
  • Yang Xu,
  • Jian Li,
  • Yinghong Chen,
  • Ning Chen,
  • Li Li

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 253
p. 113862

Abstract

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Polylactic acid (PLA) holds great potentials in biomedical applications, but its inherent brittleness restricts its versatility to a considerable degree. This study proposed a novel and heterogeneous modifier-free approach to enhance PLA’s toughness by leveraging the stretching induced evolution of stereocomplex crystal (SC) microstructures in situ formed during microinjection molding. By incorporating 10 wt% poly(D-lactic acid) (PDLA) into poly(L-lactic acid) (PLLA) through combining melt compounding and microinjection molding featuring extremely intense shear, we achieved a remarkable 10-fold increase in elongation at break (from 8.7 % to 87.2 %) while maintaining tensile strength (∼67 MPa). The structural analyses revealed a transition from phase-separated sea-island morphologies to deformable stereocomplex crystal PLA phase domains, which could serve as the physical crosslinking points facilitating stress transfer, and can be transformed into microfibril and shish-kebab structures upon drawing. Such the phase structure evolution could efficiently distribute stress and hence enhance toughness without sacrificing biodegradability or biocompatibility. This work develops a streamlined approach in simplifying conventional stereocomplex reinforcement strategies and thus offers a scalable method for developing fully biodegradable, and high-performance PLA-based materials suitable for diverse biomedical applications, such as bone tissue reconstruction.

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